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Research Article| Volume 102, P32-36, January 2021

Characteristics of healthcare workers infected with COVID-19: A cross-sectional observational study

Open AccessPublished:October 08, 2020DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2020.10.009

      Highlights

      • Overall, 4.3% of healthcare workers (HCWs) at Royal Hospital, Muscat, Oman, tested positive for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) during the study period.
      • There was no significant difference between hospital and community acquisition according to age, nationality, or presence of co-morbidities.
      • There was a significant difference between hospital and community acquisition according to HCW category, sex, and being at risk of exposure to COVID-19 in the hospital.
      • Overall, 78% of the infected HCWs had no chronic diseases and all made an uneventful recovery.

      Abstract

      Introduction

      Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a new emerging infectious disease, first identified in China in December 2019, caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). This study describes the characteristics of healthcare workers (HCWs) who tested positive for COVID-19 in a tertiary care hospital in Oman.

      Methods

      This was a cross-sectional descriptive analysis of HCWs with COVID-19.

      Results

      During the study period, 204 HCWs tested positive for COVID-19 by rRT-PCR test, with a test positivity rate of 21.2%; the percentage of infected hospital staff was 4.3%. Their mean age was 36 years. Overall, 2.2% of the male staff were infected, while 9.3% of the female staff were infected. Among the clinicians, 4.7% were infected; among the nurses, 4.1% were infected. Regarding acquisition, 61.3% of infections (n = 125) were community-acquired and 25.5% (n = 52) were hospital-acquired; no source was identified in 13.2% of cases (n = 27). There was a significant difference between hospital-acquired and community-acquired COVID-19 according to the different HCW categories (p < 0.001), sex (p = 0.041), and being at risk of COVID-19 exposure in the hospital (p < 0.001). There were no significant differences in relation to nationality (p = 0498), age (p = 0.119), or the presence of co-morbidities (p = 0.326). Seventy-eight percent (n = 160) had no chronic diseases and 44% presented with fever and an acute respiratory infection (n = 90); all made an uneventful full recovery. The peak of infection acquisition was after the Eid Al Fitr festival.

      Conclusions

      HCWs are at an increased risk of COVID-19 in the workplace. The strengthening of infection control measures to prevent exposures from infected patients and colleagues and to reduce the spread of COVID-19 is a necessity.

      Keywords

      Introduction

      Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a newly emerging infectious disease that was first identified in China in December 2019. It is caused by infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). On January 30, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the disease a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) and later on March 11, 2020, COVID-19 was declared a pandemic (
      • Gan Wee Hoe
      • Lim John Wah
      • Koh David
      Preventing intra-hospital infection and transmission of coronavirus disease 2019 in health-care workers.
      ). In Oman, the first two cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed on February 24, 2020; both cases were travel-related (
      • Khamis Faryal
      • Rashidi Badria Al
      • Al-Zakwani Ibrahim
      • Wahaibi Ahmed H.Al
      • Awaidy Salah T.Al
      Epidemiology of COVID-19 infection in Oman: analysis of the first 1304 cases.
      ). Community transmission was declared by the public health authorities on March 26, 2020 (

      Oman Enters Community Transmission Stage of Coronavirus; Numbers to Rise, Says Top Official. TAS News Service, March 26, 2020. https://www.thearabianstories.com/2020/03/26/oman-enters-community-transmission-stage-of-coronavirus-numbers-to-rise-says-top-official.

      ).
      Healthcare workers (HCWs) are at risk of acquiring COVID-19 in the workplace. Several reports have described the reasons leading to COVID-19 acquisition by HCWs within healthcare settings. A shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE), long-time exposure to large numbers of infected patients, inadequate training in infection prevention and control, and exposure to unrecognized COVID-19 patients have been the most prominent causes (

      Jiancong Wang, Mouqing Zhou, Fangfei Liu (2020). Exploring the reasons for healthcare workers infected with novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in China. J Hosp Infect. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2020.03.002.

      ,
      • Heinzerling
      • et al.
      Transmission of COVID-19 to health care personnel during exposures to a hospitalized patient—Solano County, California, February 2020.
      ,

      Pengcheng Zhou, Zebing Huang, Yinzong Xiao, Xun Huang, Xue-Gong Fan (2020). Protecting Chinese Healthcare Workers While Combating the 2019 Novel Coronavirus, Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2020.60.

      ).
      This study describes the characteristics of HCWs who tested positive for COVID-19 at Royal Hospital, Muscat, Oman, which is the main hospital providing care for patients with moderate to severe COVID-19.

      Methods

      This was a cross-sectional descriptive analysis of all HCWs who tested positive for COVID-19 during the period from March 18 to July 11, 2020 at the Royal Hospital in Muscat, Oman. The hospital is the largest tertiary care hospital in the country and employs a total of 4703 HCWs. The HCWs were tested if they reported symptoms or were exposed in the hospital or community to a confirmed case. All positive cases were notified to the Infection Prevention and Control Department and investigated by a trained infection control practitioner (ICP) to determine the type of acquisition and collect the data required using a checklist. These data included baseline demographic data, the type of acquisition based on a risk assessment done by the ICP following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and national guidelines (

      CDC, USA, Interim U.S. Guidance for Risk Assessment and Work Restrictions for Healthcare Personnel with Potential Exposure to COVID-19, March 2020. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/guidance-risk-assesment-hcp.html.

      ,

      Infection Prevention & Control Guidelines for COVID-19, MOH Oman. www.moh.gov.om. MOH/DGDSC-DIPC/COVID-19 IPC Guidelines/Vers 05/31st March 2020.

      ), symptoms, and clinical outcomes. The diagnosis data were extracted from the hospital electronic system. This research was approved by the hospital research committee (SRC#35/2020).
      Data were entered into an Excel spreadsheet and analyzed accordingly as numbers and percentages. The Excel data were transferred into IBM SSPS Statistics version 22 software (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA) to compare hospital-acquired (HA) cases and community-acquired (CA) cases using the Chi–square test or Fisher’s exact test, as indicated. A p-value of <0.05 was considered significant. In the comparison between HA and CA acquisition of the infection, cases with an unknown source of infection were excluded.

      Definitions

      A HCW was defined as any paid or unpaid person serving in a healthcare setting who had the potential for direct or indirect exposure to patients or their infectious secretions and materials, including, for example, doctors, nurses, laboratory workers, facility or maintenance workers, clinical trainees, and volunteers (

      CDC, USA, Interim U.S. Guidance for Risk Assessment and Work Restrictions for Healthcare Personnel with Potential Exposure to COVID-19, March 2020. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/guidance-risk-assesment-hcp.html.

      ).
      Significant exposure was considered an exposure of 15 min or more while not wearing PPE and being within 6 feet (approximately 2 m) of a person with confirmed COVID-19 and/or having unprotected direct contact with infectious secretions or excretions from a person with confirmed COVID-19. Any duration was considered prolonged if the exposure occurred during the performance of an aerosol-generating procedure (

      CDC, USA, Interim U.S. Guidance for Risk Assessment and Work Restrictions for Healthcare Personnel with Potential Exposure to COVID-19, March 2020. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/guidance-risk-assesment-hcp.html.

      ).
      The infection was considered community-acquired if the HCW reported contact with a confirmed COVID-19 case in the community setting. The infection was considered hospital-acquired if the HCW reported exposure to a confirmed or suspected COVID-19 case in the hospital setting and had not had any contact with a symptomatic or confirmed COVID-19 case in the community setting or been exposed as per Infection Prevention and Control Department records. Those HCWs with no exposure to symptomatic or suspected/confirmed cases in the hospital or in the community setting were recorded as having an unknown or unidentified source.
      HCWs in the ‘at risk’ category were those who were exposed either directly through delivering direct care to patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 or indirectly, such as cleaners and medical records staff.

      Results

      During the study period, 963 COVID-19 RT-PCR tests were done, of which 204 were positive, giving a test positivity rate of 21.2%. The percentage of infected hospital staff was 4.3% (204/4703). The mean age of those infected was 36 years, and 88 (43.1%) HCWs were in the age group 26–35 years, 72 (35.3%) were in the age group 36–45 years, 24 (11.8%) were in the age group 46–55 years, and six (2.5%) were in the age group >55 years. Further demographic data are given in Table 1.
      Table 1Characteristics of healthcare workers who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2.
      VariableNumber of HCWsPercentage
      Age (years) (mean 36 years)
       <26146.9%
       26–358843.1%
       36–457235.3%
       46–552411.8%
       >5562.5%
      Sex
       Male7436%
       Female13064%
      Nationality
       Omani13466%
       Non-Omani7034%
      Risk factors
       None present16078.4%
       Hypertension157.3%
       Diabetes mellitus2311.3%
       Others63%
      Outcome
       Required hospitalization10.5%
       Outpatient care20399.5%
      COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; HCWs, healthcare workers.
      Overall, 2.2% (74/3299) of the male staff tested positive for COVID-19, while 9.3% (130/1404) of the female staff tested positive. Among the clinicians, 4.7% (26/556) were infected; among the nurses, 4.1% (77/1870) were infected. Regarding the category of HCW, 2.8% of paramedics and 5.6% of the support and administrative staff were infected. The percentage of infection among the Omani hospital staff was 5.9%, while the percentage of infection among the non-Omani hospital staff was 2.9% (Table 2).
      Table 2Percentage of infected healthcare workers among the overall hospital healthcare workers by category.
      Overall hospital staff categoryTotal infected in category% infected in category
      Male3299742.2%
      Female14041309.3%
      Doctors556264.7%
      Nurses1870774.1%
      Paramedics969272.8%
      Support/administrative1308745.6%
      Omani22651345.9%
      Non-Omani2438702.9%
      More than three-quarters of the infected HCWs (78%, n = 160) had no chronic diseases or risk factors for severe COVID-19, while 7% (n = 15) had hypertension, 11% (n = 23) had diabetes mellitus, and 3% (n = 6) had other chronic diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and asthma (Table 1).
      The most common acquisition of COVID-19 among HCWs was from the community (61.3%, n = 125), followed by hospital acquisition (25.5%, n = 52); no source was identified in 13.2% of cases (n = 27). Among those who acquired COVID-19 in the hospital, 18 (35%) acquired the infection from a confirmed positive COVID-19 colleague and 33 (65%) from exposure to patients. The peak acquisition of infection was from June 7 to June 20, 2020, as shown in Figure 1.
      Figure 1
      Figure 1Chronology of the different types of acquisition: community-acquired (CA), hospital-acquired (HA), unknown.
      The most common presentation in affected HCWs was an acute respiratory infection (ARI) with fever (44%, n = 90), followed by ARI with no fever (36%, n = 73) and headache (15%, n = 31). The other symptoms such as diarrhea and loss of smell and/or taste represented small percentages, as shown in Figure 2.
      Figure 2
      Figure 2Percentage of healthcare workers presenting symptoms on diagnosis.
      Figure 3 summarizes the numbers and categories of HCWs who tested positive for COVID-19. The majority of the infected HCWs were nurses (38%, n = 77), followed by support staff and administrative staff (36%, n = 36), including housekeeping, engineering, laundry, and catering staff. Doctors and paramedics each constituted 13% (n = 26 and n = 27, respectively).
      Figure 3
      Figure 3Percentage of infected healthcare workers of the total infected (N = 204).
      All HCWs in this cohort had mild infections and did not require hospitalization, with the exception of one HCW who had pneumonia and was admitted to the hospital. This HCW received hydroxychloroquine and an oral antibiotic.
      In the univariate analysis, HA and CA cases were compared among the different categories of HCW and other variables. No significant difference was found between the two groups in relation to nationality, age group, or presence of co-morbidities. However, a significant difference was found between the sexes, with 35% of the female HCWs compared to 20% of the male HCWs having a HA infection. A significant association (p < 0.001) was found between acquiring COVID-19 in the hospital and working in a high-risk department or working as a doctor or nurse, as shown on Table 3.
      Table 3Univariate analysis of the type of acquisition–hospital-acquired (HA) versus community-acquired (CA)–and the variables studied.
      VariableCategoryCA (n = 123)HA (n = 52)Totalp-Value
      NationalityOmani80 (65%)31 (59.6%)111 (63.4%)0.498
      Non-Omani43 (35%)21 (40.4%)64 (36.6%)
      SexMale51 (41.5%)13 (25%)64 (36.6%)0.041
      Female72 (58.5%)39 (75%)111 (63.4%)
      Age (years)<2610 (8.1%)4 (7.7%)14 (8.0%)0.119
      26–3551 (41.5%)23 (44.2%)74 (42.3%)
      36–4548 (39.0%)14 (26.9%)62 (35.4%)
      46–5513 (10.6%)7 (13.5%)20 (11.4%)
      >551 (0.8%)4 (7.7%)5 (2.9%)
      Co-morbidityNo92 (74.8%)43 (82.7%)135 (77.1%)0.326
      Yes31 (25.2%)9 (17.3%)40 (22.9%)
      HCW categoryAdmin staff9 (7.3%)4 (7.7%)13 (7.4%)<0.001
      Doctor7 (5.7%)12 (23.1%)19 (10.9%)
      Nurse36 (29.3%)29 (55.8%)65 (37.1%)
      Paramedic18 (14.6%)6 (11.5%)24 (13.7%)
      Support staff53 (43.1%)1 (1.9%)54 (30.9%)
      At risk of exposure to COVID-19No74 (60.2%)8 (15.4%)82 (46.9%)<0.001
      Yes49 (39.8%)44 (84.6%)93 (53.1%)
      HCW, healthcare worker; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.

      Discussion

      The mean age of HCWs in this study was 36 years, which is close to the average national community age, as published by
      • Khamis Faryal
      • Rashidi Badria Al
      • Al-Zakwani Ibrahim
      • Wahaibi Ahmed H.Al
      • Awaidy Salah T.Al
      Epidemiology of COVID-19 infection in Oman: analysis of the first 1304 cases.
      . However, 64% of infected HCWs were female, which is in contrast to the community data (
      • Khamis Faryal
      • Rashidi Badria Al
      • Al-Zakwani Ibrahim
      • Wahaibi Ahmed H.Al
      • Awaidy Salah T.Al
      Epidemiology of COVID-19 infection in Oman: analysis of the first 1304 cases.
      ). The percentage of infected female HCWs in the study cohort is closer to that reported in the USA (73%), but higher than the percentage reported by Chu et al. in China (33.3%) and by Glonar et al. in Iran (53.5%) (
      • CDC COVID-19 Response Team
      Characteristics of health care personnel with COVID-19—United States, February 12–April 9, 2020.
      ,
      • Chu Jiaojiao
      • et al.
      Clinical characteristics of 54 medical staff with COVID‐19: a retrospective study in a single center in Wuhan, China.
      ,
      • Sabetian Golnar
      • Moghadami Mohsen
      • Haghighi Leila Hashemizadeh Fard
      • Fallahi Mohammad Javad
      • Shahriarirad Reza
      • Asmarian Naeimehossadat
      • et al.
      COVID-19 Infection Among Healthcare Workers: a Cross-Sectional Study in Southwest Iran.
      ).
      The Omani staff had a higher infection rate (5.9%) in comparison to expatriate staff (2.9%); however, there was no significant difference in HA versus CA infection between these two groups.
      In this cohort, 38% of the infected HCWs were nurses, with an infection rate of 4.1%. This is lower than in the study by Glomar et al. from Iran, where nurses accounted 51.3% of infected HCWs (
      • Sabetian Golnar
      • Moghadami Mohsen
      • Haghighi Leila Hashemizadeh Fard
      • Fallahi Mohammad Javad
      • Shahriarirad Reza
      • Asmarian Naeimehossadat
      • et al.
      COVID-19 Infection Among Healthcare Workers: a Cross-Sectional Study in Southwest Iran.
      ). The infection rate among support and administrative staff was 5.6%, and most of the infections were community-acquired (43%), while the infection rate among doctors was 4.7%, with 23.1% of their infections being hospital-acquired, which is higher than in a cohort reported from Iran, where the infection rate among doctors was 3.2%.
      The majority of HCWs acquired the infection during the 2 weeks from June 7 to June 20, 2020. This coincided with the period after Eid Al Fitr (May 23–26, 2020), which is an important religious festival for Muslims characterized by large social gatherings and family visits. Additionally, hospital acquisition among HCWs increased in the last week of the study period, after the hospital experienced an outbreak due to HCWs and patients being exposed to a patient diagnosed with COVID-19 who received non-invasive ventilation in an open ward.
      Among the categories of HCW, the highest percentage of infection was found for the support and administrative staff, at 5.6%; however, 43.1% of these infections were community-acquired.
      In this study, 35% of hospital-acquired infections were a result of contact with another infected colleague, particularly during ‘break’ times, as the HCWs were not compliant with social distancing and universal masking when eating. In this group, it was observed that the index HCW would have mild ARI symptoms and a prior history of chronic sinusitis or allergic rhinitis that delayed the clinical suspicion and diagnosis of COVID-19, resulting in them infecting other colleagues. The same situation was reported by

      Michael Klompas, Charles A. Morris, Julia Sinclair, Madelyn Pearson and Erica S (2020). Shenoy. Universal Masking in Hospitals in the Covid-19 Era. Engl J Med nejm.org. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMp2006372.

      .
      Most of the HCWs in this cohort suffered from a mild infection, and only one HCW required hospitalization for moderate pneumonia and was treated with hydroxychloroquine and an oral antibiotic. This might be due to the younger age of this cohort as compared with that in the study by Chu et al., who reported that age was inversely related to the severity of illness (median age for severe/critical disease was 47 years versus 38 years for non-severe disease; p = 0.0015) (
      • Chu Jiaojiao
      • et al.
      Clinical characteristics of 54 medical staff with COVID‐19: a retrospective study in a single center in Wuhan, China.
      ). Also, only a small percentage of the HCWs had chronic diseases, which might explain the good outcome.
      This study has several limitations. First, the actual number of infected HCWs might be underestimated, due to under-reporting, especially of infected HCWs who were diagnosed in other institutions. Second, data on antibiotic use and chest X-ray findings were not available for all of the infected HCWs. Third, there may be an underestimation of the symptoms, as these were reported at the time of the interview or during the staff clinic visit at diagnosis. The HCWs might have developed more symptoms later that were not reported.
      In conclusion, HCWs are at a high risk of acquiring COVID-19 in the workplace. In the study cohort, there were many reasons that might account for the acquisition of COVID-19 among HCWs, such as low compliance with infection control precautions, non-compliance with social distancing and universal masking during eating times, and late diagnosis of HCWs who had mild symptoms. The infection control measures for COVID-19 that apply to the community, such as social distancing and universal masking, must be applied meticulously in the hospital among HCWs to prevent hospital-acquired infections.

      Funding source

      No funds required or received.

      Ethical approval

      This research was approved by the hospital research committee (SRC#35/2020).

      Conflict of interest

      All authors declare no conflict of interest.

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